In
Latin Ursa Major means greater she-bear. In Greek Arktos is
the word for bear, hence the name Arctic, which means bearish and describes
the far northern parts of the earth where the Great Bear constellation
dominates the heavens even more than in the northern hemisphere. A very
large constellation, Ursa Major is best known for its famous asterism
or star grouping, the Big Dipper.

The
new way of viewing the Great Bear places the bowl of the dipper
on the Bears shoulder like a saddle and the tip of the handle
forms the Bears nose.

Location
in the Night Sky

Ursa
Major is highest in the sky in the spring and lowest in the autumn, when,
according to Indian legends, the Bear is looking for a place to lie down
for its winter hibernation. This constellation is a circumpolar constellation,
which means it travels closely around the North Star; it is always above
the horizon never rising or setting; it can be seen any time of the year,
high or low in the sky.

The
following graphic shows the position of the Big Dipper in the early evening
each season. In the spring the bowl is high above and inverted, pouring
water upon the new flowers. In summer the bowl looks as if it is ready
to scoop up some cool water with its handle above and its bowl below.
In autumn the bowl is right-side-up, ready to catch the falling leaves.
In winter the handle points down like an icicle.

The
pointer stars in the bowl of the Big Dipper point to Polaris, our current
North Star. The distance to Polaris appears to be six times the distance
between the pointer stars.

To
find the Great Bear in the Spring night sky, look high overhead and
locate the Dipper first, then the three pairs of stars which form
the Bears
paws ... this works for the ancient or new way of viewing the Great
Bear. The bowl of the Dipper is inverted as if pouring the contents
of fresh
water down upon an awakening earth. The paws of the Bear are up high,
as if walking in the heavens.

The
Little Bear Constellation
Ursa Minor, the Little Dipper

Description

Ursa
Minor means little bear in Latin, but this circumpolar constellation resembles
a dipper more than a bear and is therefore commonly called the Little
Dipper. It is much less conspicuous than the Big Dipper, but it contains
the most important navigational star in our sky, Polaris, the Pole or
North Star. From our perspective Polaris appears to remain in the same
location, while all the other stars seem to rotate around it, as if it
is the center of the universe. Since you will always see Polaris in the
same northern location, whenever you look at it and extend your arms out
to the side, the front of your body is facing north, and south is behind
you; your extended right arm points east and your extended left arm points
west. Give it a try! When you experience this, you can understand why
the North Star has been of great navigational value down through the ages.

The
celestial North Pole is the point where the imaginary polar axis of
the earth would touch the sky, if it were extended. Polaris, for all
practical
purposes, is this celestial North Pole, being only one degree off this
point. It is not the brightest of stars, nor was it or will it always
be the star closest to the pole. Because of the earths wobble
the celestial pole shifts as the centuries go by, and different stars
become
pole stars at different times.

Most
of the Little Dippers stars are faint. Only the two at the end
of the bowl are fairly bright. They are called Guardians of the Pole
as they
march around the pole like sentries. The brighter one of the pair,
seen at the upper end of the bowl, was the Pole Star in the time of
Plato,
about 400 BCE.

Location in the Night Sky

Polaris
can be found by following a line formed by the pointer stars in the bowl
of the Big Dipper. Extend this line 6x the distance between the two pointer
stars, and you will see the North Star. There are no bright stars in between
to cause any confusion. Polaris is the tip of the Little Dipper handle.

To
the ancient Greeks, Ursa Major represented Callisto, a follower of Artemis,
virgin huntress and goddess of the crescent moon. Zeus, king of the gods,
fell in love with Callisto and she gave birth to his child named Arcas.
Some say Hera, wife of Zeus and queen of the gods, became intensely jealous
and changed Callisto into a bear left to roam the forest. One day Arcas
came upon the bear. Callisto stood on her hind legs to welcome her son.
Thinking himself attacked, Arcas readied his bow. Zeus, who saw what was
about to happen, turned Arcas into a small bear. Grabbing both bears by
their tails, Zeus hurled them into the safety of the sky, where they still
roam close together as Ursa Major and Ursa Minor. This action might explain
why the ancient view of the Great Bear has an unusually long tail.

Variations
of the Myth

Some
say Hera had the last laugh, she moved the bears into a part of the sky
near the celestial pole. There they would never set below the horizon,
never resting, remaining the eternal victims of Zeus wandering
eye.

Another
legend says Zeus seduced Callisto by taking on the form of Artemis to
deceive her. Artemis demanded the strictest chastity from the maidens
who followed her hunting through the mountains. In order to save Callisto
and Arcas from the wrath of the virgin goddess, Zeus transformed Callisto
into the Great Bear and set her in the stars with Arcas, their child,
beside her.

Still
others say it was the rage of Hera or Artemis which cursed Callisto, who
then turned into a bear pursued by her own hounds. Only later was she
placed as the Great Bear among the stars.

Some
say Arcas grew up to become king of Arcadia and brought agriculture to
that wild and rugged country, for which he was immortalized among the
stars as Bootes, inventor of the "Wagon," which is the other name for
the constellation of the Great Bear.

A
more ancient belief behind the story of Callisto is that the Great Bear
is really Artemis herself, and that Callisto is another name for Artemis.
Artemis is the ancient queen of the stars and the ruler of the Arctic
Pole. The she-bear is her symbol. She is the "Sounding One" and the "Lady
of the Wild Mountains" giving off a "brilliant blaze" as she hunts. She
is the queen of the inviolate meadow far from the haunts of men. She
is
the queen of the crescent moon, moonlight being her actual presence,
and she is believed to cause wild animals and trees to dance.

Later
the English linked the constellation to both the Bear and Wagon. They
saw it as the wagon of King Arthur, whose Round Table is reflected
in
the constellations circling the Pole, and whose name comes from the Celtic
word for "bear." Legend has it that Arthur is sleeping in a cave with
his knights beside him, and will return one day to save his country
in
its hour of need. The seven most important stars of the Bear-Wagon (the
Big Dipper) are also known as the Seven Sleepers of Epheus, who lie
dreaming
in a mountain cave waiting for the resurrection. These Seven Sleepers,
unlike Arthur, are said to have awoken after 200 years and gone down
to
the local town for provisions, after which they went to sleep once more.

In
ancient China the seven stars of the Big Dipper were associated with the
celestial palace of the Lord On High, the Star God of Longevity, the heavenly
mountain, the paradise of the immortals. The star Sirius, the Heavenly
Wolf, guarded this celestial palace. Today Sirius, which shares the space
motion Ursa Major, is regarded as an outlying member of it!

The
Great Bear throughout the ages has been linked to the gods and goddesses
to royality and immortality. Open to this constellation in the springtime
and receive its heavenly blessings! The paws of the Great Bear are up
high, as if walking in the heavens, and the bowl of its Big Dipper is
inverted as if pouring heavenly contents upon an awakening earth. Look
up, be blessed and graced!

From-
Stars for Lincoln, Doctors, and Dogs by James Benbow Bullock (Gourmet
Guides, San Francisco, 1981), includes last two images on this page- The Lost Zodiac by Catherine Tennant (Bulfinch Press, Boston,
1995)- Burnhams Celestial Handbook, Vol. 3 by Robert Burnham,
Jr. (Dover Publications. New York 1978) - The Stars: A New Way to See Them by H.A. Rey (Houghton Mifflin
Co., Boston, 1980), includes top three images on this page